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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Other types of music > Vocal music > Choral music
for SATB (with divisions) and organ This vibrant and rhythmic carol
sets the traditional French carol text and includes an English
singing translation. It is a perfect option for good amateur and
professional choirs.
Choral Monuments provides extensive material about eleven
epoch-making choral masterworks that span the history of Western
culture. Included are: Missa Pange lingua (Josquin Desprez); Missa
Papae Marcelli (G. P. da Palestrina); B Minor Mass (J. S. Bach);
Messiah (G. F. Handel); The Creation (Joseph Haydn); Symphony #9
(Ludwig van Beethoven); St. Paul (Felix Mendelssohn); Ein deutsches
Requiem (Johannes Brahms); Messa da Requiem (Giuseppe Verdi); Mass
(Igor Stravinsky); and War Requiem (Benjamin Britten). The works
are presented in separate chapters, with each chapter divided into
three basic sections-history, analysis, and performance practice.
Discussions of history are focused on relevancies-the genesis of
the designated work in reference to the composer's total choral
output, the work's place within the musical environment and social
climate of its time, and essential features of the work that make
it noteworthy. In addition, the compositional history addresses
three other factors: the work's public reception and critical
response, both at the time of its composition and in ensuing years;
the history of score publications, detailing the various
differences between editions; and the texts of the composition. The
material regarding textual treatment, which often includes the
complete texts of the works being discussed, concentrates on
primary concerns of the text's usage; also included in the
discussion are noteworthy aspects of texts separate from the music
as well as biographical details of librettists and poets, if
appropriate. The analysis section of each chapter outlines and
describes musical forms and other types of compositional
organization, including parody technique, mirror structures, and
motto repetitions, as well as salient compositional characteristics
that directly relate and contribute to the work's artistic stature.
Numerous charts and musical examples illustrate the discussions.
The discussion of performance practices includes primary source
quotations about a wide range of topics, from performing forces,
tempo, and phrasing of each work to specific issues such as tactus,
text underlay, musica ficta, metric accentuation, and
ornamentation.
for SATB accompanied and unaccompanied 30 varied pieces ranging in
style from the classic and sentimental to the humorous and madcap.
With the standards of the repertoire are new pieces and fresh
arrangements by some of the finest arrangers. The volume provides
an unrivalled kaleidoscope of concert encores.
This newest volume in The Works of Giuseppe Verdi series comprises
his only two surviving secular choral works: "Inno popolare," or
"Hymn of the People," for unaccompanied male chorus, and "Inno
delle nazioni," or "Hymn of the Nations," for tenor solo, chorus,
and orchestra.
Verdi wrote the brief "Inno popolare" in 1848 at the behest of the
Italian philosopher and patriot Giuseppe Mazzini, intending that it
become an anthem for Italy at a time when the country had just
driven away its Austrian overlords. He wrote no more independent
patriotic pieces until he was asked in 1861 to represent his
country with a patriotic composition at a musical jubilee during
London's International Exhibition of 1862. The resulting piece was
"Inno delle nazioni," the critical edition of which is based on
Verdi's autograph score, preserved at the British Library. Other
important sources include the composer's musical sketches, recently
discovered in the Verdi family villa, and the performing parts
Toscanini used for a BBC broadcast in 1943.
This colourful and exotic setting of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's epic
poem is a welcome addition to the English choral repertory. The
absence of Rawsthorne's original orchestral score (destroyed in
1940 during a bombing raid) had, until 2007, prevented the
performance of this extraordinary work. However, a new
orchestration by Edward Harper (available on hire from Oxford
University Press) has allowed Rawsthorne's dream-like evocation of
an exotic land to take its rightful place on the concert platform.
In the Mood is an anthology of choral arrangements of seventeen classic popular songs by such great names as Fats Waller, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, and Richard Rodgers. All the pieces are expertly arranged by the editors to suit the needs of amateur SATB groups--school choirs, youth choirs, or chamber choirs of any description--looking for lighter popular repertoire. There is a mixture of accompanied and unaccompanied numbers in a variety of styles: smoky blues, up-tempo scat, sentimental swing, exuberant Dixieland, sophisticated close-harmony, and a couple of opulent show-stoppers like "Somewhere over the Rainbow."
Sound Advice is a valuable resource for college students, beginning
teachers, and experienced conductors of children's choirs. It
covers the vast array of skills needed by today's conductor and
will benefit all choir directors who want their choirs to reach a
higher level of artistry. This book will be useful on many levels:
for the college student studying the child voice and elementary
teaching methods; for the teacher beginning to direct choirs in
schools, synagogues, churches and communities; for experienced
children's choir directors who wish to know more about orchestral
repertoire for treble voices, conducting an orchestra, and
preparing a children's choir to sing a major work with a
professional orchestra. The underlying educational philosophy is
sound; the author sees development of musicianship through singing
as the primary goal of a children's choir program. This philosophy
differs dramatically from the traditional concept of the conductor
as all-knowing and the singers as receptacles. An outstanding
aspect of the book is how the author leads the reader to an
understanding of how to teach musicianship. Developing literacy in
the choral setting is a mysterious, amorphous process to many
conductors, but the author clearly outlines this important process
with practical suggestions, well-documented examples, and a clear
reading style which will reach readers on many levels. The
comprehensive repertoire, skill-building sheets, and programs for
all types of children's choirs will provide teachers with immediate
and highly valuable resources.
Choral music is now undoubtedly the foremost genre of participatory
music making, with more people singing in choirs than ever before.
Written by a team of leading international practitioners and
scholars, this Companion addresses the history of choral music, its
emergence and growth worldwide and its professional practice. The
volume sets out a historical survey of the genre and follows with a
kaleidoscopic bird's eye view of choral music from all over the
world. Chapters vividly portray the emergence and growth of choral
music from its Quranic antecedents in West and Central Asia to the
baroque churches of Latin America, representing its global
diversity. Uniquely, the book includes a pedagogical section where
several leading choral musicians write about the voice and the
inner workings of a choir and give their professional insights into
choral practice. This Companion will appeal to choral scholars,
directors and performers alike.
"This book comes from a very fine music educator with
exceptional experience, who has common sense and a real
understanding of what a beginning teacher should know. The book
puts into print issues that are widely discussed at conventions and
at conferences, and that are common knowledge for the experienced
teacher, but that are not covered in a music education class. It is
a plain and simple book, written in a language that is easy for
anyone going into the profession to understand. It makes valuable
suggestions in just about every aspect of the role of a choral
music teacher." Michael Schwartzkopf, Professor of Music Education,
Indiana University School of Music"
Choral Monuments provides extensive material about eleven
epoch-making choral masterworks that span the history of Western
culture. Included are: Missa Pange lingua (Josquin Desprez); Missa
Papae Marcelli (G. P. da Palestrina); B Minor Mass (J. S. Bach);
Messiah (G. F. Handel); The Creation (Joseph Haydn); Symphony #9
(Ludwig van Beethoven); St. Paul (Felix Mendelssohn); Ein deutsches
Requiem (Johannes Brahms); Messa da Requiem (Giuseppe Verdi); Mass
(Igor Stravinsky); and War Requiem (Benjamin Britten). The works
are presented in separate chapters, with each chapter divided into
three basic sections-history, analysis, and performance practice.
Discussions of history are focused on relevancies-the genesis of
the designated work in reference to the composer's total choral
output, the work's place within the musical environment and social
climate of its time, and essential features of the work that make
it noteworthy. In addition, the compositional history addresses
three other factors: the work's public reception and critical
response, both at the time of its composition and in ensuing years;
the history of score publications, detailing the various
differences between editions; and the texts of the composition. The
material regarding textual treatment, which often includes the
complete texts of the works being discussed, concentrates on
primary concerns of the text's usage; also included in the
discussion are noteworthy aspects of texts separate from the music
as well as biographical details of librettists and poets, if
appropriate. The analysis section of each chapter outlines and
describes musical forms and other types of compositional
organization, including parody technique, mirror structures, and
motto repetitions, as well as salient compositional characteristics
that directly relate and contribute to the work's artistic stature.
Numerous charts and musical examples illustrate the discussions.
The discussion of performance practices includes primary source
quotations about a wide range of topics, from performing forces,
tempo, and phrasing of each work to specific issues such as tactus,
text underlay, musica ficta, metric accentuation, and
ornamentation.
for SATB and piano or small orchestra This delightful arrangement
of a traditional Swedish melody presents the tune in a variety of
scorings, from unison upper voices at the opening to classic
four-part harmony with a twist later on. The piano or orchestral
accompaniment brings new flavour to the melody on each rendition
through Wilberg's masterful employment of subtle chromatic
inflections. This arrangement will prove a popular choice both in
services and concerts. Orchestral material is available on hire.
for SATB and organ This is an exciting and accessible setting to a
really memorable tune of William Dalrymple Maclagan's text. It is
easy and fun to sing and ideal for any church choir looking for a
contemporary anthem during All Saint's Day or throughout the month
of November.
Choral Scores is an anthology of music exemplifying distinctive
choral repertoire by the most noteworthy composers throughout the
history of Western music. A companion volume to Denis Shrock's
Choral Repertoire (Oxford 2009), it presents works of salient
importance to the development of choral music in Western culture,
representing the music of the composers, eras, and movements
discussed most prominently in that volume. Including 132
compositions by 124 different composers, each presented unabridged
and in full score, and spanning the entirety of Western music
history, from the medieval era through the twentieth century, and
into the twenty-first, Choral Scores is the most thorough, and
up-to-date collection of choral music available. Complete with an
appendix offering literal translations of texts, as well as
composer and genre indices, Choral Scores is an essential reference
for choral scholars, teachers, and students alike.
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